Office Christmas Party (2016) Hollywood Movie Review By Critics

Office Christmas Party is 2016 American Christmas comedy film directed by Josh Gordon & Will Speck and written by Justin Malen and Laura Solon, based on a story by Jon Lucas and Scott Moore. The film stars Jason Bateman, Olivia Munn, T. J. Miller, Jillian Bell, Courtney B. Vance, Kate McKinnon, Randall Park and Jennifer Aniston.

Summary :

When the CEO tries to close her hard-partying brother’s branch, he and his Chief Technical Officer must rally their co-workers and host an epic office Christmas party in an effort to impress a potential client and close a sale that will save their jobs.

Trailer :

Office Christmas Party Movie Review :

Aniston has a great time as the vampy, Krav Maga-ing Bitch Who Stole Christmas, and Miller’s willful idiocy is weirdly endearing.Full Review

Office Christmas Party (2016) Hollywood Movie Review By The A.V. Club

Assembling a whole comedy festival’s worth of very funny people isn’t a foolproof recipe for hilarity, but it should assure at least a decent number of laughs. Whether Office Christmas Party clears that very low bar depends on how generous you want to be — in this season of generosity — with the definition of “decent number” and “laughs.”Full Review

Office Christmas Party (2016) Hollywood Movie Review By Empire

In a year of Bad Moms, Bad Santas and Bad Neighbours, this is, essentially, Bad Employees: another irresponsible-adults comedy, another great cast, and another erratic script. Catch it for McKinnon.Full Review

Rating : 2/5

Office Christmas Party (2016) Hollywood Movie Review By Variety

Turn them loose, and this cast has nearly endless potential to be outrageous, and yet, the script…keeps interrupting the festivities with unnecessary details about whether the company will even be around tomorrow.Full Review

Office Christmas Party (2016) Hollywood Movie Review By The Wrap

A busy but witless and stale comedy that rehashes every raunchy gag we expect from R-rated comedies, it also wears its hackneyed sentimentality and cookie-cutter underdog story beats as proudly as adhesive nametags.Full Review